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B1 中級 英語 12:35 Educational

Haitian Revolutions: Crash Course World History #30

CrashCourse · 4,412,216 回視聴 · 追加日 3週間前

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00:00

Hi, I’m John Green. This is Crash Course World History. And apparently it’s Revolutions

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Month here at Crash Course, because today we are going to discuss the often-neglected

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Haitian Revolutions. The Haitian Revolutions are totally fascinating and they involve two

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of my very favorite things: 1. Ending slavery, and

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2. Napoleon getting his feelings hurt. I can’t help myself, Napoleon. I like to see you suffer.

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[theme music]

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So, the French colony in Saint-Domingue began in the 17th century as a pirate outpost. And

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its original French inhabitants made their living selling leather and a kind of smoked

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beef called boucan. All that beef actually came from cattle left behind by the Spanish,

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who were the first Europeans to settle the island.

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But anyway, after 1640, the boucan-sellers started to run low on beef. And they were

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like, “You know what would pay better than selling beef jerky? Robbing Spanish galleons,”

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which as you’ll recall were loaded with silver mined from South America. So, by the

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middle of the 17th century, the French had convinced many of those buccaneering captains

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to give up their pirating and settle on the island.

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Many of them invested some of their pirate treasure in sugar plantations, which, by 1700

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were thriving at both producing sugar and working people to death. And soon, this island

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was the most valuable colony in the West Indies, and possibly in the world. It produced 40%

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of Europe’s sugar, 60% of its coffee, and it was home to more slaves than any place except Brazil.

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And as you’ll recall from our discussion of Atlantic slavery, being a slave in a sugar-production

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colony was exceptionally brutal. In fact, by the late 18th century, more slaves were

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imported to Saint-Domingue EVERY YEAR— more than 40,000— than the entire white population

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of the island. By the 19th century, slaves made up about 90% of the population.

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And most of those slaves were African born, because the brutal living and working conditions

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prevented natural population growth. Like, remember Alfred Crosby’s fantastic line,

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“it is crudely true that if man’s caloric intake is sufficient, he will somehow stagger

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to maturity, and he will reproduce?” Yeah, well, not in 18th century Haiti, thanks to

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Yellow Fever and smallpox and just miserable working conditions. So, most of these plantations

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were pretty large, they often had more than 200 slaves, and many of the field workers—

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in some cases, a majority— were women.

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Colonial society in Saint-Domingue was divided into four groups, which had important consequences

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for the revolution. At the top, were the Big White planters who owned the plantations and

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all the slaves. Often these Grand Blancs were absentee landlords who would just rather stay

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in France and let their agents do, you know, the actual brutality.

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Below them were the wealthy free people of color. Most of the Frenchmen who came to the

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island were, you know, men, and they frequently fathered children with slave women. These

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